PRESIDENT Goodluck
Jonathan yesterday took a swipe at governors for accusing the Federal
Government of bad leadership, asking them to stop pushing blames when they have
failed on their part to provide primary and secondary education for their
citizens.Speaking in Bauchi during the North-east Zonal Rally of the Peoples
Democratic Party, PDP, Jonathan also lampooned some northern governors over
insurgency in their states which he blamed on lack of education for the
children and employment consequent upon which they are ready tools for
terrorists.President Goodluck JonathanJonathan, who charged the governors to
take charge and stop blaming their inept leadership on the Federal Government,
however asked if the federal government, constitutionally responsible for the
provision of tertiary education, should be in charge of primary and secondary
education at the state level.He said, “ Sometimes governors will come and say we have some
issues because of bad leadership. I was governor, deputy governor before I
became a governor. I spent eight years at the state level, I handled security
challenges. That was the state where the first commercial kidnapping took place
because of excess militancy.More than 70 % of the state is swamp. I knew how we
handled things. A governor will come and say bad leadership, bad leadership
from whom? If we have security challenges, whether you call them Boko Haram or
whatever, these are people who couldn’t go to primary school, who couldn’t go to secondary school and they have no
hope and miscreants or criminals now recruit them and using them; if you see
what they wear, they wear rags and not normal clothes; all what they put on
their bodies is not worth N10, but they carry rifles and bullets that are worth
more that N250, 000. Somebody gives them food to eat so that they can kill.”You ask how did we build this army of
unemployed or unemployable youth? The Federal Government does not control primary
education; it does not control secondary education, and a governor has been on
seat for almost eight years and we have people in that state that can’t go to primary school, that can’t go to secondary school. You say bad
leadership, who is the bad leader? Is it the Federal Government? I made sure
that every state has a university. That is the responsibility of the Federal
Government and I have done it.Governors must make sure that our children go to
primary school, governors must make sure that our children go to secondary
school. Somebody hide under the cover of politics and cannot do it in eight
years or seven years plus. We still have do many children in your state that
cannot go to primary school, not going to secondary school and you open your mouth
to say bad leadership; is it the Federal Government or Mr. President that
should come and take your children to primary schools? Federal Government by
the constitution faces tertiary education. “Earlier in his remarks, PDP National Chairman, Alhaji
Adamu Muazu, who reiterated that aspirants must go to their wards, local
governments and states to convince the people to vote for them, disclosed that
all congresses in the 36 states and Abuja would be televised life for people to
watch.In his remarks, Vice President Namadi Sambo disclosed that all closed
schools in the zone would be re- opened soon.Also in his remarks, Chairman, PDP
Board of Trustees, BoT, Chief Tony Anenih, who noted that the Jonathan-led
administration has done much for the North-east, said that one good turn must
deserve another
MenyeneEkaiko
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Monday, 31 March 2014
ARMED SOLDIERS RAID AL-MUSTAPHA’S RESIDENCE
Armed men,
believed to be soldiers, Friday evening, raided one of the residences of Major
Hamza Al Mustapha (rtd), former Chief Security Officer to the late Head of
State, General Sani Abacha, located at Durbin Katsina, Kano metropolis, leaving
in its wake sordid tales of rights violation and molestation.Theheavily armed
men, who reportedly came in trucks and tanks, allegedly cordoned several
streets leading to the house and seized the occupants who were mostly women and
children in an operation that lasted 60 minutes.*Al-MustaphaAl-Mustapha’s younger brother, identified as Hadi, is
also said to be a resident of the house.Eyewitnesss said the ‘soldiers’ came in trucks and tanks and, immediately they gained
entrance into the building, ordered everyone around to lie face flat on ground
and, at gunpoint, conducted a thorough search of the building.“One Abubakar, reportedly a cousin to Major
Al-Mustapha, was maltreated by the troops. He is recuperating at a private
hospital, a witness recounted.The eyewitness revealed that the wife of Hadi, Al
Mustapha’s brother, was forced, at gunpoint, to
conduct the armed men round the expansive building, adding that “the traumatized housewife was immediately
taken to a hospital shortly after they left”.Another source stated: “The invading forces were not friendly, not even the
children were spared as the house was ransacked inside out all in the name of
searching for an imaginary cache of arms”.The source added, “The same treatment was meted to those outside. I heard
their leader, a colonel, during a telephone conversation, telling the person at
the other end that they had not found anything incriminating and that it seemed
the information (they had) was not accurate”.Speaking on the development, Hadi disclosed that the
family was evaluating the damages done by the men, stressing: “We intend to come up with details of what
happened and the action to follow in due course.”The outgoing military spokesman in Kano State, Captain
Ikediche Iweha, while reacting to the story, declared: “ Haba, we don’t invade houses. If the story you are telling is
correct, then it must be the usual routine checks.“In any case, give me time to verify the matter and get
back to you”.As at press time the spokesman did not
call back. He is on transfer to 3rd Armoured
BELIEVE IT OR NOT, I AM STILL A VIRGIN! — ADOKIYE-VANGUARD
Seductively
beautiful, fragile and provocative wave-making singer, Adokiye Kyrian, who
became UN ambassador of Peace in less than five years of her climb onto the
stage of music in Nigeria, is a hot item any day any time. She never ceases to
amaze and seems never to run out of bag of tricks to mesmerise fans and haters
alike.*AdokiyeThe Love You Better and Kulumo crooner, who only turned 23
yesterday has been called many names, and most of those have sexuality hanging
around them. So one could imagine my surprise and sheer incredulity when the
singer opened up to me that she is actually a virgin.We were chatting about
love and she was trying to convince me she doesn’t believe in love. “ I really don’t like love”, she said “ I’m a career
person, what I have for everyone including guys, is Agape love. Love is wicked
and there is no real love, I’m young
and living the life. Until I see one, I’m happy like this”Then I felt she was beginning to sound like a woman
who has had the love of her life run off with her best friend on her wedding
day. I could not help but asked if she had been pained by love before. To which
she retorted “Frankly, no”. But she told me she has seen enough of fake love
around her to be cautious to whom she gives her heart .“So, you aren’t in any relationship”, I queried. “ Yes, actually, I’m in a relationship with my career, architecture is my
husband and music/movie my boyfriend”, she replied.Curious as usual, I felt this rising
star may just have no one pulling her chestnut out of the fire for her, so, I
took a swing at her but got one back that got me real reeling.“You mean you are not getting laid or what?”, I returned, to which she cut me short “ Haba, what is a young girl getting laid
for. I’m still a virgin”. For a moment, I thought I hadn’t heard right and I guessed she thought so
too. “Why are you quiet? Haven’t you seen a pretty virgin before? If you
don’t believe me, you have seen one today. Any
man that buys my mum the private jet I promised her, wins my heart” she said.
INTERVIEW: WHY I WILL NOT STEP DOWN FOR GOVERNOR AKPABIO IN 2015- SENATOR ALOYSIUS ETOK IBANGA
Mr. Etok speaks on
his duties in the Senate and relationship with the governor.
Aloysius Etok is
the Chairman of the Senate Committee on Establishment and Public Service
Matters . He represents the Akwa-Ibom North-West in the Senate; a seat the
incumbent Akwa Ibom State governor, Godswill Akpabio is interested in.
Mr. Etok speaks on
his committee’s duties and the expected 2015 battle he
would have with the state governor.
We learnt you were
invited for an interview at Planet FM, a private radio station in Akwa Ibom
State, but was barred from featuring in the programme. Can you tell us what
happened?
I was about going
into the studio when the programme manager came in and told us that there was a
technical fault and begged that the programme be discontinued to allow for
repairs to be carried out on the faulty equipment. I don’t know whether there was some other issue
but that was what the technical manager told me.
But the CEO of the
station, Tony Afia, in a post on Ibom Forum, indicated that the time paid for
by the producer of the programme had elapsed before you were invited into the
studio?
Well, Tony has the
right to say whatever he wants to say. If I had arrived late for the programme,
why was it announced that I was at the studio? It was announced while I was
there that they were going to have an interview with me after a member of the
state House of Assembly from Uruan was interviewed. If he went on to say that
the time had elapsed then it was his own. Whatever he said or would like to say
is left for the judgment of the public. Clearly, one could see the
contradiction. When he called me for a discussion, he apologised and said he
would explain what happened to me. He never told me I arrived late for the
programme because I arrived at the station before the commencement of the
programme. I met the member of the state
House of Assembly representing Uruan at the station. As a gentleman, I agreed
with the producer that (the Member) should go in first because he was there
before me.
Did Mr. Afia later
offer you an explanation as promised, when he called to apologise to you?
He called to get
an appointment for us to meet but I didn’t have time to meet with him. He called for about two days but I didn’t have time to see him. If I had time, I
would have listened to his explanation.
Do you think the
treatment you received at the station has something to do with your frosty
relationship with the state governor?
That would be left
for Afia’s judgment. My relationship with the
governor should not have anything to do with a private station. Atlantic FM is
not a government radio station; therefore, I cannot see any reason why he would
play funny. Since he is running a
private station, he should be willing to provide an alternative to the
government broadcasting stations. One would have understood if it were a
government broadcasting station. But for a private station to do what that, it
means Afia is not ready to provide the alternative platform for the people. I
wish him good luck because when the administration ends next year, I don’t know what he will be doing.
You have been a
private business man and a member of the House of Representatives and now a
senator of the Federal Republic of Nigeria. How challenging are your duties at
the Senate?
My job at the
Senate is quite challenging and interesting. It is interesting in the sense
that I deal directly with the welfare of the people as well as the future of
Nigerians. My committee oversees a critical sector of the Nigerian public
service. I chair the Senate Committee on Establishment and Public Service
Matters. We oversee recruitment, promotion and discipline of civil servants. We
also deal with pension matters of the civil, public, military and the police
services. It is a very sensitive and challenging assignment.
Not quite long
ago, it was alleged that you received bribes to cover up the scam in the
pension sector. You denied the allegation. Can you tell Nigerians what actually
happened?
It was a drama of
sorts and I have come to realise that in Nigeria, corruption is almost endemic.
Corruption is almost completely embedded in the conduct of public business and
if you find yourself fighting it, it will definitely fight back. I have said
before and I want to say it again: corruption in the pension sector is bigger
and deeper than the one in the oil sector. It is also more cancerous.
In the oil sector,
you have a few persons who form a cabal but in the pension sector, it takes a
lot of people to perpetrate it. The leader will recruit a lot of people into
the system. When you are fighting them it means you are stepping on so many
toes at the same time and it will be difficult to know where the fight is
coming from. That was why when we fought the pension thieves to a standstill,
they decided to fight back. They arranged a ring and empowered them to run a
smear campaign against my person. But thanks to God, when somebody is lying,
people will know. On my part, I called on security agencies and offered myself
to be arrested and investigated to unravel whether my accusers were telling the
truth or not. How can somebody be involved in fraud when he rejected money that
was given to him? Is it possible to turn
around and accept anything from a man one rebuked for offering him bribes? If I
wanted to collect a car from somebody, would I collect a car that is seven
years old when ministers are collecting brand new bullet-proof cars? Would I be
moving forward or backward at this stage of my life? These are some of the
issues Nigerians should consider. They talked about giving me equipment to use
in my farm but the truth is that I don’t have a farm in any part of the country and it is
verifiable. If you collect a bulldozer, will you swallow it so people will not
see? If you collect a tanker, people will see it. All these things are
verifiable. When my colleagues in the senate investigated the allegation, they
found it was a lie and blackmail. By third week of December last year, we
cracked the ring. We discovered that there were about six persons who were
involved in the racket. The security agencies are already on their trail.
Are these people civil servants?
They are a bunch
of criminals who were hired to form a smear ring.
The Senate was
strongly behind you when the incident happened. Why was it so?
Because they know
Aloysius Etok. I have been with them from the 6th Senate. They know what I can
do and what I will not do. When you are a shepherd, you will know your ship and
your ship will know you. My colleagues
know what I am capable of doing and what I cannot do. There are a lot of things
I cannot do for the sake of my name, my family and the God that I worship and
those on whose mandate I am serving in the senate. For the sake of our
democracy and the need to move the country forward, we must fight every evil
tendency that tends to destroy this nation.
Are there things
you want Nigerians to know about the scam?
Certainly, I was
surprised at the fact that there could be that level of rot within the pension
sector. I didn’t believe there could be that level of
impunity and arrogance in the way and manner the funds were being stolen and
the exhibition of ill-gotten wealth by the pension thieves. I never believed
those kind of things could happen in this country. I was equally shocked at the
operations of the pension cabal and the extent they went. They took the money
with impunity and without regards to the extant regulations regarding financial
operations in the public service. They broke every known financial regulation
in the management of the pension funds.
And we found that more than N100 billion was missing from the system.
What measures are
being put in place to ensure that such bare-faced robbery does not continue in
the pension fund administration?
We had submitted
the report of our investigation to the government but even though the executive
hasn’t issued a White Paper on it, we have seen
evidence of the report being implemented in piece-meal. For instance, the
Pension Transitional Administration Programme, PETAP has been set up to bring
together all the pension administrators which operated as independent bodies
under one umbrella. PETAP does not cover
the military but other pension bodies including the Police, Customs,
Immigrations, Civil Defence and the Prisons. All these pension offices have
been brought together and a director-general has already been appointed.s
I had a meeting
with the management of PETAP but because the Coordinating Minister for the
Economy, Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala wasn’t there,
we had to adjourn the meeting. We know that the setting up of PETAP is a move
in the right direction. With it, the government will close the loopholes and
sanitise the sector. But even with that, the government must initiate a process
of creating a biometric record of pensioners in the country with a view to
creating a databank. There is no way we can manage the pension sector without a
databank of pensioners. It is only when that is done that we could say the
loopholes have been closed.
It is quite obvious
you want to return to the Senate in 2015. How confident are you about this in
view of the fact that the state Governor, Godswill Akpabio, and many others are
also eyeing the seat?
Power belongs to
God and mandate belongs to the people. It can never be an election until two or
more people are involved in a contest. So the governor is welcome on board and
it will be proper if he wishes to come to the senate that he contests for it.
It is God that will give power to who He will. In doing that, God will not
negotiate or consult with anybody. He already knows who he will give the power
to. On the other hand, the owners of the mandate know who they want to send to
the senate come 2015. They know who will be willing to be their servant. The
people are the bosses while the representative is the servant. So the people
know who they will send and when we get to the bridge, we will cross it.
You had a
misunderstanding with your governor sometime last years. How is your
relationship with the governor now?
People call it a
misunderstanding but there was nothing like that. I don’t have any problem with the governor. I keep on saying
that if we keep to our tracks, there will be no misunderstanding. If we don’t cross each other’s way, there will be no misunderstanding. Akpabio has his duty post. He is the governor
of the state and I am the senator representing Akwa Ibom North-West. We have
distinct areas of operation.
What is your
expectation from INEC in 2015
I know that the
2015 election will be better than that of 2011.
INEC has enough time to prepare and deploy new strategies for the
election. Besides, Nigerians are getting wiser and more desirous to vote and
defend their votes. The people are getting wiser in terms of party affiliation
and choice of candidates and the tendency to intimidate or force somebody to do
what he wouldn’t want to do is waning.
2011 was a
watershed of politically motivated violence in Akwa Ibom State. Do you expect
something different in 2015?
I think the
security agencies took note of what happened in 2011 and they are exploring
alternative ways of dealing with the situation. They are also developing new
techniques of handling security situations in each of the senatorial districts
and in the entire state. I am sure the security agencies will be at their best
and will be able to handle whatever situation may arise. I regretted what happened because in 2007,
about 67 candidates contested for the position of the governor and nobody died.
However, in 2011, a few people contested and so many people were killed. We
pray that such should not happen again. We should not lose people because of an
election. It is better for people to be alive to see a person in power or not
taking power than taking power at the expense of human lives.
What will you not
do to get power?
I will not engage
in violence. I will never kill. I cannot spill blood nor do anything contrary
to God’s commandment for the purpose of capturing
power. I will never, never kill anybody for any reason whatsoever.
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